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Outcomes of patients with cancer with acute coronary syndrome-associated cardiogenic shock

Leiva, Orly; Rao, Sunil; Cheng, Richard K; Pauwaa, Sunil; Katz, Jason N; Alvarez-Cardona, Jose; Bernard, Samuel; Alviar, Carlos; Yang, Eric H
BACKGROUND:Cardiogenic shock (CS) is a common complication of acute coronary syndrome (ACS) and is associated with significant morbidity and mortality. Revascularization has been shown to reduce mortality in ACS-CS. Patients with cancer are at high risk of ACS and CS. However, patients with cancer are often undertreated with invasive procedures and outcomes of patients with cancer and ACS-CS have not been thoroughly characterized. METHODS:Patients with ACS-CS from 2014 to 2020 with and without cancer were identified using the National Readmission Database (NRD). Primary outcome was death at 90-days. Secondary outcomes were 90-day cardiovascular (CV) and bleeding readmissions, and index hospitalization major bleeding and thrombotic complications. Patients with cancer were compared to patients without cancer using multivariable logistic and Cox proportional hazards regression. Temporal trends in revascularization among patients with and without cancer were examined. Effect of revascularization among patients with cancer and ACS-CS was assessed using propensity score weighting (PSW). RESULTS:A total of 140,205 patients were identified, of whom 6118 (4.4 %) with cancer were identified. Patients with cancer were less likely to undergo percutaneous coronary intervention (45.5 % vs 53.5 %) or be managed with mechanical circulatory support (36.6 % vs 46.0 %). After multivariable logistic regression, there was no difference in primary outcome (adjusted OR 0.98, 95 % CI 0.92-1.06) but patients with cancer had higher risk of 90-day CV (HR 1.11, 95 % CI 1.01-1.22) and bleeding readmissions (HR 1.39, 95 % CI 1.10-1.76). Among patients with cancer and ACS-CS, revascularization was associated with lower primary outcome (OR 0.54, 95 % CI 0.50-0.58) and 90-day CV readmission (HR 0.68, 95 % CI 0.59-0.77) after PSW. CONCLUSIONS:Among patients with ACS-CS, patients with cancer have similar 90-day death but higher risk of 90-day CV and bleeding readmissions. Additionally, revascularization was associated with improved outcomes among patients with cancer and ACS-CS. Further studies are needed to optimize patient selection for invasive management among patients with cancer.
PMID: 40268570
ISSN: 1878-0938
CID: 5830392

Digoxin Loading Doses and Serum Digoxin Concentrations for Rate Control of Atrial Arrhythmias in Critically Ill Patients

Ahuja, Tania; Saadi, Raghad; Papadopoulos, John; Bernard, Samuel; Pashun, Raymond; Horowitz, James; Yuriditsky, Eugene; Merchan, Cristian
Intravenous (IV) digoxin loading dose recommendations for rate control of atrial arrhythmias in critically ill patients are not well studied. When using digoxin in the setting of atrial fibrillation/atrial flutter (AF/AFL), a loading dose (LD) in either a fixed-dose regimen, weight-based dose, or pharmacokinetic-based calculation to target a serum digoxin concentration (SDC) of 0.8-1.5 ng/mL is recommended. The objective of this study was to assess the safety and effectiveness of digoxin LD used in critically ill patients for rate control of AF/AFL and to assess the SDC achieved. This single center retrospective cohort study included patients who received IV digoxin and had a SDC drawn. The primary endpoint was the median SDC achieved after a digoxin LD. Secondary outcomes included the frequency of SDCs ≥1.5 ng/mL and heart rate (HR) control. A total of 92 patients were included. The median total LD of digoxin for the entire cohort was 11mcg/kg (750 mcg). For 61% of the cohort, the LD was distributed over six-hour intervals. The median SDC after completion of the IV digoxin LD was 1.3 ng/mL (0.9, 1.7). The incidence of supratherapeutic SDC was 36% for the total cohort. A target HR < 110 beats per minute within 24 hours from digoxin LD was achieved in 60% of the cohort. In conclusion, a median total digoxin LD of 750 mcg in critically ill patients with AF/AFL, targeting a SDC < 1.5ng/mL may be considered for acute rate control, taking into account drug-drug interactions in the cardiac intensive care unit. Future studies are necessary to confirm our findings.
PMID: 39531271
ISSN: 1533-4023
CID: 5752892

Right Ventricular-Pulmonary Arterial Uncoupling as a Predictor of Invasive Hemodynamics and Normotensive Shock in Acute Pulmonary Embolism

Yuriditsky, Eugene; Zhang, Robert S; Zhang, Peter; Postelnicu, Radu; Greco, Allison A; Horowitz, James M; Bernard, Samuel; Leiva, Orly; Mukherjee, Vikramjit; Hena, Kerry; Elbaum, Lindsay; Alviar, Carlos L; Keller, Norma M; Bangalore, Sripal
Right ventricular-pulmonary arterial coupling describes the relation between right ventricular contractility and its afterload and is estimated as the ratio of the tricuspid annular plane systolic excursion (TAPSE) to pulmonary arterial systolic pressure (PASP) by way of echocardiography. Whether TAPSE/PASP is reflective of invasive hemodynamics or occult shock in acute pulmonary embolism (PE) is unknown. This was a single-center retrospective study over a 3-year period of consecutive patients with PE who underwent mechanical thrombectomy and simultaneous pulmonary artery catheterization with echocardiograms performed within 24 hours before the procedure. A total of 70 patients (81% intermediate risk) had complete invasive hemodynamic profiles and echocardiograms, with TAPSE/PASP calculated. The optimal cutoff for TAPSE/PASP as a predictor of a reduced cardiac index (CI) (CI ≤2.2 L/min/m2) was 0.34 mm/mm Hg, with an area under the curve of 0.97 and sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value of 97.3%, 90.9%, 92.3%, and 96.8%, respectively. Every 0.1 mm/mm Hg decrease in TAPSE/PASP was associated with a 0.24-L/min/m2 decrease in the CI. This relation was similar when restricted to intermediate-risk PE. The TAPSE/PASP ratio was predictive of normotensive shock with an odds ratio of 2.63 (95% confidence interval 1.42 to 4.76, p = 0.002) per unit decrease in the ratio. In conclusion, in patients with acute PE who underwent mechanical thrombectomy, TAPSE/PASP was a strong predictor of a reduced CI and normotensive shock. This means that noninvasive point-of-care assessment of hemodynamics may have added value in PE risk stratification.
PMID: 39505227
ISSN: 1879-1913
CID: 5766852

Comparing Outcomes Between Advanced Practice Providers and Housestaff Teams in the Cardiac Intensive Care Unit

Zhang, Robert S; Zhang, Peter; Bailey, Eric; Ho, Alvin; Rhee, Aaron; Xia, Yuhe; Schimmer, Hannah; Bernard, Samuel; Castillo, Patricio; Grossman, Kelsey; Dai, Matthew; Singh, Arushi; Padilla-Lopez, Mireia; Nunemacher, Kayla; Hall, Sylvie F; Rosenzweig, Barry; Katz, Jason N; Link, Nathan; Keller, Norma; Bangalore, Sripal; Alviar, Carlos L
BACKGROUND/UNASSIGNED:With an increasing demand for critical care expertise and limitations in intensivist availability, innovative staffing models, such as the utilization of advanced practice providers (APPs), have emerged. OBJECTIVES/UNASSIGNED:The purpose of the study was to compare patient outcomes between APP and housestaff teams in the cardiac intensive care unit (CICU). METHODS/UNASSIGNED:This retrospective study, spanning March 2022 to July 2023, compares patient characteristics and outcomes between two CICU teams embedded in the same CICU at a large urban academic hospital: one staffed by housestaff and the other by APPs (80% physician assistants, 20% nurse practitioners) who each had approximately 1 to 2 years of experience in the CICU. The primary outcome was CICU mortality. Multivariable Cox regression analyses and Kaplan-Meier curves were used to assess the primary outcome. RESULTS/UNASSIGNED: < 0.0001). CONCLUSIONS/UNASSIGNED:Our moderately sized study demonstrated no difference in CICU or in-hospital mortality between patients managed by a housestaff team versus those managed by an APP team.
PMCID:11576500
PMID: 39569031
ISSN: 2772-963x
CID: 5758722

Inferior vena cava contrast reflux grade is associated with a reduced cardiac index in acute pulmonary embolism

Yuriditsky, Eugene; Zhang, Robert S; Zhang, Peter; Horowitz, James M; Bernard, Samuel; Greco, Allison A; Postelnicu, Radu; Mukherjee, Vikramjit; Hena, Kerry; Elbaum, Lindsay; Alviar, Carlos L; Keller, Norma M; Bangalore, Sripal
BACKGROUND AND AIMS/OBJECTIVE:Patients with intermediate-risk pulmonary embolism (PE) commonly present with a significantly reduced cardiac index (CI). However, the identification of this more severe profile requires invasive hemodynamic monitoring. Whether inferior vena cava (IVC) contrast reflux, as a marker of worse right ventricular function, can predict invasive hemodynamics has not been explored. METHODS:This was a single-center retrospective study over a 3-year period of consecutive patients with PE undergoing mechanical thrombectomy and simultaneous pulmonary artery catheterization. CT pulmonary angiograms were reviewed, and contrast reflux was graded as no/minimal reflux (limited to the IVC) or substantial (opacification including hepatic veins) based on an established scale. RESULTS:were 62.6 %, 93.1 %, 94.6 %, and 56.2 %, respectively. These findings remained significant in a multivariable model and were similar when isolating for intermediate-risk patients (n = 72, 85 %). CONCLUSIONS:The degree of contrast reflux is highly specific for a reduced cardiac index in PE even when isolating for intermediate-risk patients. Real-time prediction of a hemodynamic profile may have added value in the risk-stratification of PE.
PMID: 39369656
ISSN: 1879-2472
CID: 5705862

Clinical Course and Treatment of Patients With Apical Aneurysms Due to Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy

Sherrid, Mark V; Massera, Daniele; Bernard, Samuel; Tripathi, Nidhi; Patel, Yash; Modi, Vivek; Axel, Leon; Talebi, Soheila; Saric, Muhamed; Adlestein, Elizabeth; Alvarez, Isabel Castro; Reuter, Maria C; Wu, Woon Y; Xia, Yuhe; Ghoshhajra, Brian B; Sanborn, Danita Y; Fifer, Michael A; Swistel, Daniel G; Kim, Bette
BACKGROUND/UNASSIGNED:There is controversy about risk of malignant arrhythmias and stroke in patients with apical aneurysms in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM). OBJECTIVES/UNASSIGNED:The aim of this study was to estimate the associations of aneurysm size and major HCM risk factors with the incidence of lethal and potentially lethal arrhythmias and to estimate incidence of unexplained stroke. METHODS/UNASSIGNED:In 108 patients (age 57.4 ± 13.5 years, 37% female) from 3 HCM centers, we assessed American Heart Association/American College of Cardiology guidelines risk factors and initial aneurysm size by echocardiography and cardiac magnetic resonance imaging and assessed outcomes after median 5.9 (IQR: 3.7-10.0) years. RESULTS/UNASSIGNED:and also without risk factors VT, VF, or SCD occurred in only 2.5%. Clinical atrial fibrillation (AF) was prevalent, occurring in 49 (45%). Stroke was commonly associated with AF. Stroke without conventional cause had an incidence of 0.5%/year. Surgery in 19% was effective in reducing symptoms. VT ablation and surgery were moderately effective in preventing recurrent VT. CONCLUSIONS/UNASSIGNED:Risk factors and aneurysm size were associated with subsequent VT, VF, or SCD. Patients with aneurysms in the lowest tercile of size have a low cumulative 5-year risk. Clinical AF occurred frequently. Stroke prevalence in absence of known stroke etiologies is uncommon and comparable to risk of severe bleeding.
PMCID:11400613
PMID: 39280799
ISSN: 2772-963x
CID: 5719702

Development and external validation of a dynamic risk score for early prediction of cardiogenic shock in cardiac intensive care units using machine learning

Hu, Yuxuan; Lui, Albert; Goldstein, Mark; Sudarshan, Mukund; Tinsay, Andrea; Tsui, Cindy; Maidman, Samuel D; Medamana, John; Jethani, Neil; Puli, Aahlad; Nguy, Vuthy; Aphinyanaphongs, Yindalon; Kiefer, Nicholas; Smilowitz, Nathaniel R; Horowitz, James; Ahuja, Tania; Fishman, Glenn I; Hochman, Judith; Katz, Stuart; Bernard, Samuel; Ranganath, Rajesh
BACKGROUND:Myocardial infarction and heart failure are major cardiovascular diseases that affect millions of people in the US with the morbidity and mortality being highest among patients who develop cardiogenic shock. Early recognition of cardiogenic shock allows prompt implementation of treatment measures. Our objective is to develop a new dynamic risk score, called CShock, to improve early detection of cardiogenic shock in cardiac intensive care unit (ICU). METHODS:We developed and externally validated a deep learning-based risk stratification tool, called CShock, for patients admitted into the cardiac ICU with acute decompensated heart failure and/or myocardial infarction to predict onset of cardiogenic shock. We prepared a cardiac ICU dataset using MIMIC-III database by annotating with physician adjudicated outcomes. This dataset that consisted of 1500 patients with 204 having cardiogenic/mixed shock was then used to train CShock. The features used to train the model for CShock included patient demographics, cardiac ICU admission diagnoses, routinely measured laboratory values and vital signs, and relevant features manually extracted from echocardiogram and left heart catheterization reports. We externally validated the risk model on the New York University (NYU) Langone Health cardiac ICU database that was also annotated with physician adjudicated outcomes. The external validation cohort consisted of 131 patients with 25 patients experiencing cardiogenic/mixed shock. RESULTS:CShock achieved an area under the receiver operator characteristic curve (AUROC) of 0.821 (95% CI 0.792-0.850). CShock was externally validated in the more contemporary NYU cohort and achieved an AUROC of 0.800 (95% CI 0.717-0.884), demonstrating its generalizability in other cardiac ICUs. Having an elevated heart rate is most predictive of cardiogenic shock development based on Shapley values. The other top ten predictors are having an admission diagnosis of myocardial infarction with ST-segment elevation, having an admission diagnosis of acute decompensated heart failure, Braden Scale, Glasgow Coma Scale, Blood urea nitrogen, Systolic blood pressure, Serum chloride, Serum sodium, and Arterial blood pH. CONCLUSIONS:The novel CShock score has the potential to provide automated detection and early warning for cardiogenic shock and improve the outcomes for the millions of patients who suffer from myocardial infarction and heart failure.
PMID: 38518758
ISSN: 2048-8734
CID: 5640892

Relationship between the mixed venous-to-arterial carbon dioxide gradient and the cardiac index in acute pulmonary embolism

Yuriditsky, Eugene; Zhang, Robert S; Bakker, Jan; Horowitz, James M; Zhang, Peter; Bernard, Samuel; Greco, Allison A; Postelnicu, Radu; Mukherjee, Vikramjit; Hena, Kerry; Elbaum, Lindsay; Alviar, Carlos L; Keller, Norma M; Bangalore, Sripal
AIMS/OBJECTIVE:Among patients with acute pulmonary embolism (PE) undergoing mechanical thrombectomy, the cardiac index (CI) is frequently reduced even among those without a clinically apparent shock. The purpose of this study is to describe the mixed venous-to-arterial carbon dioxide gradient (CO2 gap), a surrogate of perfusion adequacy, among patients with acute PE undergoing mechanical thrombectomy. METHODS AND RESULTS/RESULTS:This was a single-centre retrospective study of consecutive patients with PE undergoing mechanical thrombectomy and simultaneous pulmonary artery catheterization over a 3-year period. Of 107 patients, 97 had simultaneous mixed venous and arterial blood gas measurements available. The CO2 gap was elevated (>6 mmHg) in 51% of the cohort and in 49% of patients with intermediate-risk PE. A reduced CI (≤2.2 L/min/m2) was associated with an increased odds [odds ratio = 7.9; 95% confidence interval (CI) 3.49-18.1, P < 0.001] for an elevated CO2 gap. There was an inverse relationship between the CI and the CO2 gap. For every 1 L/min/m2 decrease in the CI, the CO2 gap increased by 1.3 mmHg (P = 0.001). Among patients with an elevated baseline CO2 gap >6 mmHg, thrombectomy improved the CO2 gap, CI, and mixed venous oxygen saturation. When the CO2 gap was dichotomized above and below 6, there was no difference in the in-hospital mortality rate (9 vs. 0%; P = 0.10; hazard ratio: 1.24; 95% CI 0.97-1.60; P = 0.085). CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:Among patients with acute PE undergoing mechanical thrombectomy, the CO2 gap is abnormal in nearly 50% of patients and inversely related to the CI. Further studies should examine the relationship between markers of perfusion and outcomes in this population to refine risk stratification.
PMID: 38454794
ISSN: 2048-8734
CID: 5723232

Physiology-Guided Resuscitation: Monitoring and Augmenting Perfusion during Cardiopulmonary Arrest

Bernard, Samuel; Pashun, Raymond A; Varma, Bhavya; Yuriditsky, Eugene
Given the high morbidity and mortality associated with cardiopulmonary arrest, there have been multiple trials aimed at better monitoring and augmenting coronary, cerebral, and systemic perfusion. This article aims to elucidate these interventions, first by detailing the physiology of cardiopulmonary resuscitation and the available tools for managing cardiopulmonary arrest, followed by an in-depth examination of the newest advances in the monitoring and delivery of advanced cardiac life support.
PMCID:11205151
PMID: 38930056
ISSN: 2077-0383
CID: 5733252

Echocardiography in the Recognition and Management of Mechanical Complications of Acute Myocardial Infarction

Zhang, Robert S; Ro, Richard; Bamira, Daniel; Vainrib, Alan; Zhang, Lily; Nayar, Ambika C; Saric, Muhamed; Bernard, Samuel
PURPOSE OF REVIEW/OBJECTIVE:Although rare, the development of mechanical complications following an acute myocardial infarction is associated with a high morbidity and mortality. Here, we review the clinical features, diagnostic strategy, and treatment options for each of the mechanical complications, with a focus on the role of echocardiography. RECENT FINDINGS/RESULTS:The growth of percutaneous structural interventions worldwide has given rise to new non-surgical options for management of mechanical complications. As such, select patients may benefit from a novel use of these established treatment methods. A thorough understanding of the two-dimensional, three-dimensional, color Doppler, and spectral Doppler findings for each mechanical complication is essential in recognizing major causes of hemodynamic decompensation after an acute myocardial infarction. Thereafter, echocardiography can aid in the selection and maintenance of mechanical circulatory support and potentially facilitate the use of a percutaneous intervention.
PMID: 38526749
ISSN: 1534-3170
CID: 5644472